Terror September 1792 - 1794 Flashcards
What news reached Paris on August 25th and 1st September?
- Longwy in Lorraine had fallen to the enemy
- Verdun, the last fortress blocking the way to the capital, was under siege
What was Danton’s response to the news? What happened as a result of this?
- 30th August to 2nd September
- Ordered searches for weapons which led to 3000 being taken prisoner in 2 weeks
What began from 2nd September 1792?
- September Massacres
- 5 days of killing in which 1-1.5k/2.6k prisoners were killed
- Federes attacked refractory priests being taken to or being held in prison, killing 300
- Assembly did nothing and tensions between Girondins and Jacobins were heightened
- Girondins blamed Jacobins for inciting violence
When did the New Convention open?
- 20th September 1792
- No Girondin elected in Paris
- Robespierre, Marat, Desmoulins and Danton dominated the Parisian election and turnout outside of Paris was low so it returned the same people as active citizens had in 1791
When did the Convention declare France to be a republic? What was the state of the Convention?
- 22nd September 1792
- However, the Convention was divided between the Montagnards and Girondins: Montagnards wanted central control and control of food prices as well as louis executed
- Girondins wanted decentralisation as their support had come from the provinces, no economic controls and no or minimal direct action against the king
What was a military victory for France through September and October 1792?
- General Custine wins at the battle of Valmy at Speyer on the Rhine and takes Wormz, Mainz and Frankfurt and French force Prussian retreat at Verdun and Longwy
When was the Committee of General Security (CGS) formed? What was it?
- October 1792
- Responsible for policing and administration of justice.
- Reported to the national convention
- In 1793 was reduced from 30 deputies to 12
When did Dumouriez win the battle of Jemappes?
- Dumouriez (Girondin General)
- 6th November 1792
- Allowed France to gain control of the Austrian Netherlands
Which two decrees did the National Convention pass and what were their consequences?
- 16th and 19th November 1792
- Free and open passage of the River Shedt; angered Britain and the united provinces
- Edict of Fraternity = assistance to all who wished to recover their liberty
What was the armoire de fer and when were they discovered?
- Letters from Louis to foreign powers confirming his treachery
- Discovered 20th November 1792
What decision was made following the discovery of the armoire de fer?
- 3rd December 1792
- Decided to try the King in which Convention would be judge and jury
What did Robespierre argue should be the King’s fate?
- 4th December 1792
- King should be immediately sentenced to death without a trial
- Girondins disagreed as feared it would begin a civil war
What did the Girondins propose regarding the King’s fate?
- 27th December 1792
- Proposed appealing to the people in a referendum, but it was rejected by 400 votes
When were the votes on Louis’ guilt/fate taken? What did they decide?
- 15th-17th January 1793
- 0 votes against his guilt
- Some abstained
- 361 votes for his death and - 61 for his death on conditions
When was Louis executed?
- Decision made on 20th January 1793
- Executed 21st
What do France declare after Louis’ execution?
- Declare war on Britain and the United Provinces in February
What was ordered on 24th February 1793?
- Levy of 300,000 men
- All 18-25 year old men without immediate dependents to give military service
- Married men to forge and transport supplies
- Children should shred old linen for lint
- Old people preach hatred of kings
- Didn’t come into practice until the 23rd of August
Disruption in the month following Louis’ execution?
- 22nd-26th February
- Grocery stores, warehouses and shops attacked
- Order restored on 26th by NG
Who defeated France in March 1793? What else happened?
- Austrians beat France at Neerwinden and evacuate Aachen
- Spain declares war on France
What did Marat write in his articles and when?
- 9th - 10th March 1793
- Wrote articles blaming Girondins for France’s problems
- Girondin printing presses were attacked by Sans-Culottes
What and when was the Vendée Rebellion?
- March 1793
- Started in response to levee en masse and sale of church land which allowed bourgeoise to raise rent
- Catholic and royalist army seized Cholet on March 14th and massacred local officials
- 30,000 men were sent from the front to the Vendee in May, but, by June, rebels had seized Loire, Angers and Sammur and were advancing to Le Mans and Paris
- 6th September army of 100,000 arrived at Nantes and defeated rebels by December
What and when was the Federalist Revolt?
- March 1793
- Jacobin leaders forced out of office in Lyon and similar events occurred in Avignon, Marseille, Toulon and Bourdeaux
- 60/83 departments protested in total and serious conflict in 8
- Toulon was unique in that it merged with a royalist revolt and proclaimed Louis as King
- Revolutionary army, under the control of the CPS, to respond; suspected traitors were imprisoned by S-C but less than 200 were condemned by special courts
Who were representatives on mission? When were they appointed?
- March 1793
- Jacobins who ensured order and loyalty throughout France and arrested suspects
- Ensured food supplies
- From April, ensured troop morale and generals reported daily to the CPS and weekly to the national convention
When was the Revolutionary Tribunal established and what did it do?
- 10th March 1793
- To try counter revolutionaries
- 5 judges, a public prosecutor with 2 assistants and Parisian jurymen
- Aim was to ‘embody terror’
What was the Summary execution decree? When?
- 19th March 1793
- Rebels captured with arms could be executed without appeal within 24 hours